$39 for a Body Scrub at Great Face and Body ($89 Value)

Great Face and Body

In a Nutshell

Scrub made of four types of salt, aromatherapy oil, and organic butter slough off dead skin

The Fine Print

Promotional value expires 120 days after purchase. Amount paid never expires.Appointment required. Limit 3 per person, may buy 3 additional as gifts. Limit 1 per visit. Valid only for option purchased. All goods or services must be used by the same person.Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

Great Face and Body

The Deal

Aestheticians use Great Face and Body’s exclusive Bathing Bad Body scrub to buff away dry, scaly skin during a 40-minute treatment. The scrub’s four types of salt, eight aromatherapy oils, and numerous organic butter varieties leave skin soft and smooth. After the buffing, the aesthetician removes the scrub with warm towels and massages cerulean Bathing Bad lotion into the skin for intense hydration.

Great Face and Body

Keith West-Harrison can't squeeze his job title on one line of a resume. Yes, he's an aesthetician. But he's also a lifestyle coach, celebrity beauty advisor, humanitarian, and self-proclaimed "eco-urban shaman." In 2009, New Mexico Business Weekly included Keith's name on its annual "40 Under Forty" list, celebrating his entrepreneurial excellence and achievements at his airy, urban spa, Great Face and Body.

Amid gleaming hardwood floors, international decorations, and lots of black leather, the team at Great Face and Body caters to the skin needs of all ages. Specialists freshen frontages with both preventative and restorative facials, ranging from 20-Something treatments to the None-of-Your-Damn-Business facial for clients 60 or older. Services employ only organic and sustainable beauty products, which Keith and his posse develop and handcraft in the store using many locally cultivated ingredients. This commitment to eco-friendly practices has earned them accolades such as DAYSPA Magazine's title of Top Green Spa of 2013. The spa also integrates 5,000-year-old Native American, African, and Ayurvedic wellness principles to provide a challenging tongue twister to any reporters who stop by for interviews.